andygates: (Default)
The internet is no longer mostly for porn.  Social networking - Facebook and LJ and MySpace and Twitter and whatever - has taken over from smut as the #1 time-hog.  That means (1) my gods, the song is wrong; and (2) the mainstream is doing more communicating and less consuming.  Mark my words, this is a sign of the Singularity.  Anyone got a brain jar?

Wikileaks

Feb. 18th, 2008 08:26 pm
andygates: (Default)
If you don't know it already, Wikileaks is a wiki site for leaks.  It's big news - things like the US unpublished rules of engagement for Iraq and all manner of political and corporate whistleblowing get leaked there.  It's where you go if you've got the minutes from a really juicy meeting and want it public with your identity protected.

Recently they tickled a Cayman Islands bank by leaking some of their stuff (alleged money-laundering leaked by a former exec)... and got savaged by lawyers.  Down, down went the site, for the judge ruled that the hosting ISP:

"shall immediately clear and remove all DNS hosting
       records for the wikileaks.org domain name and prevent the
       domain name from resolving to the wikileaks.org website or
       any other website or server other than a blank park page,
       until further order of this Court."


Slap! Take that, you naughty web anarchists!

Of course, taking down the DNS doesn't take down the site, as any fule kno.  You may enjoy the Streissand Effect gloatfest here at:  http://88.80.13.160/wiki/Main_Page.

And of course, as soon as word got out (and Wikileaks is very popular) mirror sites were spawned like a rash. Which means that they effortlessly survived the DOS attack and the fire at their colocation host's UPS.  And Wikileaks, very much alive and well, plans to put up as much as it can possibly find about corrupt Cayman banking.

Ah, le chortle.

Hey, Anonymous, these guys are the real deal.  "Oh fuck, the Internet is here" is not a bunch of goons exercising of a grudge in V masks, though the masks are a really nice touch.  "Oh fuck, the Internet is here" is this sort of thing: credible, robust, serious, unstoppable and making real the omniopticon that really does kill privacy dead dead dead. 
andygates: (Default)
Looking at the last year's flaps over data leaks, and the building of ever-larger databases, and the latest round of guidance and action here at work, it's clear to see that the IT consensus is that data is precious and must be secured.  Cory "Zeppelin Blogger" Doctorow even compared data leaks to nuclear waste leaks in a piece he wrote for the Guardian. 

I'm not so sure.

Data tends to leak.  That's just an observation of its behaviour.  IT is all about copying and transforming data, and very little about securing or deleting it: you have to make an effort to do those.  So I think that securing data is a fool's errand.  I don't think it's possible to reliably, securely tie down all the copies of data unless there are exceptional circumstances (such as you creating it on a tinfoil-hat OS and carrying the storage media physically with you and being able to fight off goons).

This observation is no more fatalistic than observing that the tides always come in is fatalistic.  The current frenzied attempts to secure stuff (we're ordering a pile of fingerprint-locked USB sticks, for example) are a predictable response but, like banning shampoo on airlines, a flawed one.  The avalanche has started: it's too late for the pebbles to vote.

So the next wave of killer security isn't going to be biometric scans of your perineal wrinkles stored on an orbital server.  That's just another database in another location: No, the next big thing is going to be systems where it simply doesn't matter what gets out.  I'm not sure what they will actually be, but that's the shape they will take. 

And the cultural response will be significant too.  With all sorts of your leaky information out there, everyone will be able to pick up on everyone else's foibles.  Already we're seeing nonsense where students are being sent down for being boozehounds.  That breaks when the person doing the sending-down is also exposed.  There will be predictable horror at this panopticon of pecadilloes, and some people will retreat into caves - almost literally: doing cash-in-hand work to buy stuff at farmers' markets and avoiding the blanket CCTV coverage.  But the mainstream will (with a few shocks and judders) move into a post-anonymity age.

Damn, I sound like a prophet of the Singularity. 
andygates: (Default)
A cultural observation that's at least a year late: leekspin.com.  Open up that leek-spinning girl and her Finnish gibberish loop, go on.  I wonder if Loituma sound as charming in the rest of their stuff?  Now you've got a soundtrack for the rest of this rambling...

Cunning science thought: Hawking radiation is what you get when a spontaneous particle-antiparticle pair appear across an event horizon.  Imagine for a moment that the cosmic horizon - that limit to the observable universe - is an event horizon.  Turns out that if you calculate the energies involved, they're a near match for dark energy.  Only... I thought the cosmic horizon was an artefact of the observer, being just the point at which the expansion of the universe reaches the speed of light.  My head hurts.

In other news, Wired has a good article on what it calls "Your outboard brain" - the colossal mass of stuff we know when we're online.  I'm a damn expert online, but an opinionated arse offline, so I grok this.  The article stops short of examining the philosophical implications of calling this an "outboard brain".  The human consciousness is just one of a bunch of processes bubbling around in our inboard brains.  What's going on in this outboard stuff that we may not be aware of?  And if you buy into the memetic model of information, it's even weirder: the outboard brain is an inevitable development, once the inboard one reaches capacity you need more memespace or you're just not as sexy as the other guy.  But this is shared memespace - which I think means that Wikipedia and Google are the collective unconscious.  And it means that a large portion of my memespace is actively being thought-in by other people.  The Singularity may already have happened.  Crumbs.

Still listening to the leek girl?  Excellent.

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